There does not exist any silvery bullet that will kill your drive nor there exist any magical potion to protect it! As your SSD drive ages, the wear and tear of the electrical components happen and in due course of time, leads to the failure of the drive. It is as simple as that!
When the SSDs initially hit the computer market, they were known for both good speed and great reliability. A large percentage of the users were of the view that, since the SSD has no such mechanical parts, so it is at a lower failure risk with a simple logic that – with lesser number of parts, the chances of parts breaking is also lower and so overall reliability is superior. In case of SSDs, however, this reasoning does not always fit, as data losses happen with SSDs too.
When the SSDs initially hit the computer market, they were known for both good speed and great reliability. A large percentage of the users were of the view that, since the SSD has no such mechanical parts, so it is at a lower failure risk with a simple logic that – with lesser number of parts, the chances of parts breaking is also lower and so overall reliability is superior. In case of SSDs, however, this reasoning does not always fit, as data losses happen with SSDs too.